What Is One Thing You Would Change About DCL?

All it does is disappoint customers to list a bunch of excursions that look amazing but aren't actually offered when it becomes time to book.
Yeah went I went onto the Destinations page the PP mentioned and down to Port Adventures just for the Caribbean alone 685 results come back. A staggering amount listed online.
 
It's notable that other cruise lines provide excursion details a year or more in advance (even allowing you to book them), while DCL's information is available just before the cruise. DCL should improve this by offering at least a preliminary list of confirmed options much earlier, adding more options as they become firm. All it does is disappoint customers when they list a bunch of excursions that look amazing but aren't actually offered when it becomes time to book.
If DCL has details finalized well in advance, this would be great. My guess is that this would work for most of the Caribbean and Alaska ports, but for ports visited only once or twice a year or not even every year (such as Northern Europe and the Southern Caribbean), details may not be finalized until close to the excursion booking date.
Tip: Private excursions were consistently better than DCL options and similarly priced during my European sailing.
I totally agree. My family has enjoyed our private excursions far more than our DCL-run excursions, but we've done private excursions only when we have a long time in port and places to go that are not easily accessible on our own or that really benefit from having a guide to explain them. I get frustrated when it looks like DCL offers an excursion with extras (such as a behind-the-scenes tour at Tivoli Gardens or tour of a British manor by its current owner) and then that's not offered on my cruise and apparently hasn't been for years.
 
If DCL were to try to revamp the system now and switch only to nights it would be a mess.
They could do something like Princess does and use both - number of cruises OR number of nights, whichever gives you the higher level.

  • Gold: Achieved after your first cruise.
  • Ruby: Achieved after completing 3 cruises or 30 cruise days.
  • Platinum: Achieved after completing 5 cruises or 50 cruise days.
  • Elite: Achieved after completing 15 cruises or 150 cruise days.
 

But you can narrow it down by port.
You sure can but it's still an awful lot of things being shown online when you don't have a cruise booked and know that it's specific to your cruise, time of year, opening of whatever, etc.

Just using this as a visual here's what Port Vendres, France excursions were available for my cruise. I use this port because much wasn't available and not much was there to do in Port Vendres but it gives a specific detailed offering not what could be available but was available for this cruise. In our case we didn't book an excursion for this port and actually just walked to Collioure (about a 40min walk along the coastline)

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Obviously some excursions are more safe as they are more generic in nature but I can see how the PP was talking about with stuff that has been on there for so long or like the PP mentioned with a behind the scenes Tivoli Gardens that is no longer offered and hadn't been in a while (I don't know if that was a specific instance that happened to them or they were just using it as an example). So I guess my point is a drawback to having all of these available to you before you have booked your cruise and know the collection of excursions available were selected for your specific cruise.
 
Another frustrating thing about their excursions listings is the lack of specific details on some - particularly excursions that involve a beach. They often don't state the exact beach you're going to or the beach club/bar/restaurant they contract with. Especially since they don't allow guest reviews of port adventures on the DCL site, you'd like to be able to research Google or other eviews.
 
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I'm very late to the party but the one single thing that drove us away from DCL was the traditional dining. Please let me pick where and when I want to eat a meal and who I want to eat it with. Period. Is that so hard??
 
I'm very late to the party but the one single thing that drove us away from DCL was the traditional dining. Please let me pick where and when I want to eat a meal and who I want to eat it with. Period. Is that so hard??
It is certainly possible to structure a ship to have a lot of dining rooms and give all guests a choice of where and when to dine each night.

It is hard to have that structure and also have dinner shows, servers who learn and accommodate individual preferences, and nightly theater shows that are child-friendly and scheduled opposite dinner hours.
 
Solo cabins. Would be easier for single grandparents to take (or join) families on trips if not wasting money on one solo cabin. But NCL excels at that so maybe every line has to have its specialty. Plus, an excuse to do the longer NCL trips in Alaska than DCL offers :)
 
Solo cabins. Would be easier for single grandparents to take (or join) families on trips if not wasting money on one solo cabin. But NCL excels at that so maybe every line has to have its specialty. Plus, an excuse to do the longer NCL trips in Alaska than DCL offers :)
I just wish NCL had options beyond the coffin-looking solos they have. The Solo Infinite Verandas on Celebrity's Edge Class ships are nice - slightly larger than NCL's AND you get a view of the ocean rather than being confined inside.
 
It is certainly possible to structure a ship to have a lot of dining rooms and give all guests a choice of where and when to dine each night.

It is hard to have that structure and also have dinner shows, servers who learn and accommodate individual preferences, and nightly theater shows that are child-friendly and scheduled opposite dinner hours.

This. I go back to "all cruise lines don't have to be alike". There are PLENTY of other lines that have any time dining (like almost all of them).
 
I'm very late to the party but the one single thing that drove us away from DCL was the traditional dining. Please let me pick where and when I want to eat a meal and who I want to eat it with. Period. Is that so hard??

You’re talking about eliminating Disney’s entire signature rotational dining concept. It’s one of the things that sets Disney apart from other cruise lines. If you do t like it fine- sail with someone else. There are no shortage of cruise lines that offer exactly what you are asking for.
 

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